With the increased development of ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence programs and platforms, it is important to be transparent and know how to cite when ideas and materials are generated through these programs. Here is a list of the current recommendations on how to use and cite artificially generated content from the various citations styles
MLA
Understanding Turnitin’s AI Writing Detection Feature
April 20, 2023
Tools Mentioned - Turnitin
https://blogs.chapman.edu/academics/2023/04/20/understanding-turnitins-ai-writing-detection-feature/
How to add a Turnitin Assignment
How to grade a Turnitin Assignment
Identifying AI-Written Essays: A Step-by-Step Guide for Teachers
The Washington Post – We tested a new ChatGPT-detector for teachers. It flagged an innocent student
How do I cite generative AI in MLA style?
How to cite ChatGPT
Identifying AI-Written Essays: A Step-by-Step Guide for Teachers
https://educraft.tech/identifying-ai-written-essays/
Tools Mentioned - AI Content Detector, ZeroGPT
Using Turnitin to check for plagiarized / AI-generated content
https://clear.unt.edu/approved-and-supported-technologies/turnitin/using-turnitin-check-plagiarized-ai-generated-content
Tools Mentioned - Turnitin
Availability of Turnitin Artificial Intelligence Detection
https://rtl.berkeley.edu/news/availability-turnitin-artificial-intelligence-detection
On April 4th, Turnitin released an artificial intelligence writing detection feature(link is external) intended to identify text generated by chatbot/text generators such as ChatGPT. This feature is not currently available to Berkeley instructors as campus leadership has opted out of this feature until we have the opportunity to review the feature internally and vet it for privacy, security, and accessibility, as well as for general functionality. UC Berkeley has opted out of this feature, along with several peer institutions, for a number of reasons....
Tools Mentioned - Turnitin
SimCheck AI Writing Detection
https://atus.wwu.edu/kb/simcheck-ai-writing-detection
Western’s licensed plagiarism detection software, SimCheck, is currently providing artificial intelligence (AI) writing detection until 1/1/2024 as a free preview. SimCheck is a product of Turnitin. ATUS has tested Turnitin’s AI writing detection and found it very capable but not foolproof. Instructors are advised to be aware of AI writing detection limitations and adjust assignments and assessments accordingly.
Tools Mentioned - SimCheck
About SimCheck plagiarism detection
https://itconnect.uw.edu/tools-services-support/teaching-learning/canvas/canvas-help-for-instructors/assignments/simcheck/
VeriCite, the UW’s previous plagiarism detection tool, was replaced with SimCheck by Turnitin in June 2020.* Like VeriCite, SimCheck is a web-based system that allows student papers to be submitted and checked for plagiarism. The system compares student papers with sources available on the Internet, select commercial article databases, and papers submitted at the UW.
Tools Mentioned - SimCheck
AI: Through the lens of ChatGPT & Deep Fakes
https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/2776/2023/05/session2023_DebWells.pdf
May 24, 2023 — AI Writing Check.
Tools Mentioned - copyleaks
Top 10 Best Plagiarism Checkers For AI-Generated Content
https://wordlift.io/blog/en/best-plagiarism-checkers-for-ai-generated-content/
Tools Mentioned -
GPTRadar
Originally.AI
GPTZero
AI Detector Pro
GPTKit
Turnitin
CopyLeaks
ZeroGPT
Winston AI
SciSpace Academic AI Detector
Professor Deploying Anti-plagiarism Detection Tool on 900-student Course
https://www.cc.gatech.edu/news/professor-deploying-anti-plagiarism-detection-tool-900-student-course
But the biggest concern he has for the course isn’t logistics — it’s the difficulty of tracking plagiarism.
Avoiding Plagiarism - Paraphrasing | Exactly what does "paraphrase" mean?
https://integrity.mit.edu/handbook/academic-writing/avoiding-plagiarism-paraphrasing
10 Types of Plagiarism
https://libguides.uta.edu/researchprocess/plagiarism
Identifying machine-paraphrased plagiarism
JP Wahle, T Ruas, T Foltýnek, N Meuschke… - Information for a Better …, 2022 - Springer
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2103.11909
How Large Language Models are Transforming Machine-Paraphrased Plagiarism
JP Wahle, T Ruas, F Kirstein, B Gipp - arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.03568, 2022 - arxiv.org
https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.03568
Do language models plagiarize?
J Lee, T Le, J Chen, D Lee - Proceedings of the ACM Web Conference …, 2023 - dl.acm.org
https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3543507.3583199
This box is a derivative of the "AI-Based Literature Review Tools" guide created by Daniel Xiao at the Texas A&M University Libraries